[bcab] Re: Advice on Nokia N95

The main keypad consists of buttons that do not have any free space
around them, they are laid out as four rows of three buttons.  Each row
of buttons is raised but there is no spacing betweeen the buttons within
each row, but there are gaps which you can feel so each button is
articulated separately rather than it being a membrain pad.  There is
marking on the number five to aid orientation.  The buttons are quite
small.  The cursor keys and soft buttons are possibly more fiddly than
they should be.  Answering the phone is simple as pushing up the slide
rather than having to poke a button to answer a call whcih may be
considered helpful.  
 
The N95 is thirsty on batteries unless you turn off some features. you
may want to have a look at something like the Nokia N82 if it is
available on your chosen network.  Whilst it is bigger it is a similar
weight to the N95 (being a candy bar format) it has buttons that have
some spacing between them though small, It has facilities similar to the
Nokia N95.  The battery is very marginally more powerful which should
help.

Regards.

Tristram Llewellyn
Technical Support
Sight and Sound Technology
Welton House North Wing, Summerhouse Road, Moulton Park, NN3 6WD

Web : www.sightandsound.co.uk


Email: tristram.llewellyn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Support: Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
General: info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Phone:
Support line:   0845 634 7979
                        01604 798 000

Sight and Sound Technology Limited is a company registered in England
and Wales, with company number 1408275. 
Sight and Sound Technology Limited is a trading subsidiary of 2nd
Phoenix Limited. 

Registered Address -
Blenheim House,
York Road,
Pocklington,
York,
YO42 1NS. 
            VAT Number - GB 860 2121 66.




 

________________________________

From: bcab-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:bcab-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Charles Crisp 
Sent: Monday, June 23, 2008 4:16 PM
To: bcab@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bcab] Advice on Nokia N95



Hi

I am considering getting a Nokia N95 on which I can install a speech
programme, however here in France I am having difficulty getting one to
see how easy it is to handle.

Can those of you who use one let me know what it is like in a practical
way to use? For instance are the buttons easy to use and is the
interface intuitive? I have not used a mobile for years and they have
become very small. My wife's phone is very small and the buttons are
depressed and difficult to separate.

What about the different speech programmes. Do they speak as you enter
each number? How much of the rest of the functions are spoken?

Any useful practical information would be welcome.

I won't be buying in France, it's too expensive especially with the tax
imposed from last month on all multi media phones, and so does anyone
know of a good honest supplier in the UK.

Thanks.

Kind regards

 

Charles Crisp

See our holiday home website: 

www.thecrisps.co.uk/french-house
<http://www.thecrisps.co.uk/french-house>  

  

 

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